It's because oxygen is always found in nature in pairs.
No. "Diatomic electron" doesn't make any sense.Oxygen is a diatomic molecule, if that's what you meant.
A molecule is two or more chemically bonded atoms, this can be as in a diatomic element such as oxygen which in its natural elemental state is found as O2 or it can be as part of a compound, such as silver nitrate AgNO3. It is what makes up the diatomic element or the compound.
A molecule is two or more chemically bonded atoms, this can be as in a diatomic element such as oxygen which in its natural elemental state is found as O2 or it can be as part of a compound, such as silver nitrate AgNO3. It is what makes up the diatomic element or the compound.
Atomicity is the number of atoms which constitute one molecule of an element. Simply we can say that it is the number of atoms of an element present in one molecule of that element.
Ozone is a chemical which is a type of oxygen molecule. It is three atoms of oxygen combined.
Monatomic molecules consist of a single atom (e.g., noble gases like helium). Diatomic molecules contain two atoms (e.g., oxygen, O2 or nitrogen, N2). Triatomic molecules consist of three atoms (e.g., ozone, O3 or carbon dioxide, CO2).
All of the noble gases are monatomic gases: helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), xenon (Xe) and radon (Rn).All the other elements that are gases at room temperature are diatomic (H2, N2, O2, F2, Cl2)
Hydrogen is a diatomic element, so the formula would be H2.The chemical symbol is H, but hydrogen usually appears as H2.
The given compounds are methane (CH4), oxygen (O2), carbon dioxide (CO2), and water (H2O). Methane and carbon dioxide are both organic compounds, while oxygen is a diatomic gas, and water is a simple inorganic compound.
Unanswerable question since it is unknown what KIND of PROPERTY is meant to be the most present in diatomic elements or which element has most of one (yet unknown) property. Please rephrase your question.
1 ratio 5 is the fixed ratio of atom in a molecules...
An unbound molecule refers to a molecule that is not chemically or physically bound to any other molecule. It exists as an independent entity and is not part of a larger structure or compound. Examples of unbound molecules can include free-floating atoms or small molecules in the gas phase.